<track>

The HTML <track> element is used as a child of the media elements <audio> and <video>. It lets you specify timed text tracks (or time-based data), for example to automatically handle subtitles. The tracks are formatted in WebVTT format (.vtt files) — Web Video Text Tracks.

Attributes

This attribute indicates that the track should be enabled unless the user's preferences indicate that another track is more appropriate. This may only be used on one track element per media element.

kind

How the text track is meant to be used. If omitted the default kind is subtitles. If the attribute is not present, it will use the subtitles. If the attribute contains an invalid value, it will use metadata. (Versions of Chrome earlier than 52 treated an invalid value as subtitles.) The following keywords are allowed:

subtitles

Subtitles provide translation of content that cannot be understood by the viewer. For example dialogue or text that is not English in an English language film.

Subtitles may contain additional content, usually extra background information. For example the text at the beginning of the Star Wars films, or the date, time, and location of a scene.

captions

Closed captions provide a transcription and possibly a translation of audio.

It may include important non-verbal information such as music cues or sound effects. It may indicate the cue's source (e.g. music, text, character).

Suitable for users who are deaf or when the sound is muted.

descriptions

Textual description of the video content.

Suitable for users who are blind or where the video cannot be seen.

chapters

Chapter titles are intended to be used when the user is navigating the media resource.

metadata

Tracks used by scripts. Not visible to the user.

label

A user-readable title of the text track which is used by the browser when listing available text tracks.

src

Address of the track (.vtt file). Must be a valid URL. This attribute must be defined.

srclang

Language of the track text data. It must be a valid BCP 47 language tag. If the kind attribute is set to subtitles, then srclang must be defined.

Usage notes

The type of data that track adds to the media is set in the kind attribute, which can take values of subtitles, captions, descriptions, chapters or metadata. The element points to a source file containing timed text that the browser exposes when the user requests additional data.

A media element cannot have more than one track with the same kind, srclang, and label.